Publication: Peripheral administration of cdp-choline and its cholinergic metabolites increases serum insulin: Muscarinic and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are both involved in their actions
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Authors
İlçol, Yeşim Özarda
Cansev, Mehmet
Yılmaz, Mustafa Sertaç
Hamurtekin, Emre
Ulus, İsmail Hakkı
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Elsevier Ireland
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Abstract
The present study was designed to test the effects of CDP-choline and its metabolites on serum insulin concentrations in rats and to investigate the involvements of cholinergic and adrenergic receptors in the effect. Intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of CDP-choline (200-600 mu mol/kg) increased serum insulin in a dose- and time-related manner. Equivalent doses (200-600 mu mol/kg; i.p.) of phosphocholine or choline also increased serum insulin dose-dependently. Serum-free choline concentrations increased several-fold following i.p. administration of CDP-choline, phosphocholine or choline itself. In contrast, equivalent doses of cytidine monophosphate and cytidine failed to alter serum insulin concentrations. The increases in serum insulin induced by i.p. 600 mu mol/kg of CDP-choline, phosphocholine or choline were abolished by pretreatment with the ganglionic nicotinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist hexamethonium (15 mg/kg; i.p.), or by the muscarinic receptor antagonist atropine methylnitrate (2 mg/kg; i.p.). Pretreatment with prazosin (0.5 mg/kg; i.p.), an alpha(1)-adrenoceptor antagonist, or yohimbine (5 mg/kg, i.p.), an alpha(2)-adrenoceptor antagonist, enhanced slightly the increases in serum insulin in response to 600 mu mol/kg of CDP-choline, phosphocholine and choline. Serum insulin also increased following central administration of choline; the effect was blocked by intracerebroventricularly injected atropine, mecamylamine or hemicholinium-3 (HC-3). It is concluded that CDP-choline or its cholinergic metabolites phosphocholine and choline increases circulating insulin concentrations by increasing muscarinic and nicotinic cholinergic neurotransmission in the insulin secreting beta-cells.
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Keywords
Neurosciences & neurology, CDP-choline, Choline, Cholinergic, Glucose, Insulin, Release, Glucose, Rat, Secretion, Cytidine, Cns
Citation
İlçöl, Y. Ö. vd (2008). ''Peripheral administration of cdp-choline and its cholinergic metabolites increases serum insulin: Muscarinic and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are both involved in their actions''. Neuroscience Letters, 431(1), 71-76.